Kohlrabi Dill Pickles

Kohlrabi Dill Pickles

Conventional wisdom says that the more repeated exposures children have to new foods, the more they are likely to grow to like the new foods. I think that's also true for adults, based on my own personal experience with kohlrabi. At first I only liked it in sushi, where I used it as a cucumber substitute--like my Egg, Carrot, and Kohlrabi Sushi or my Spam Musubi Chirashi Sushi. Then I thought of other ways I use cucumbers, and made my Spicy Asian Style Kohlrabi Pickles (which are simply yummy).

Taste is subjective, however. No matter how many exposures you have to it, if cilantro tastes like soap to you, you're not going to come around. I think the level of spiciness in a dish is a similar concern. If you don't care for a spicy pickle, you just don't care for a spicy pickle! [Me, I'm not a fan of bread & butter pickles. They're just . . . wrong.But you do you.] That's why I'm sharing this recipe for a kosher style dill pickle made with kohlrabi spears instead of pickling cucumbers.

For more recipes using kohlrabi, please see my Kohlrabi Recipes Collection. It's part of the Visual Recipe Index by Ingredient, a resource for folks like me eating from the farm share, the farmer's market, the garden, the neighbor's garden, and great deals on ugly produce at the grocery store.

Note: I've shared boiling water bath canning directions for this pickle because that's how I made it. If you'd prefer to make a quick refrigerator pickle (quick being subjective--they are quick to assemble but take a week or ideally two to cure in the fridge) please feel free to make quick pickles. Just stick the filled jars into the fridge instead of processing them in boiling water.

Kohlrabi Dill Pickles
By Kirsten Madaus

Kohlrabi spears cured in a dill brine. Like a kosher dill pickle, but using kohlrabi instead of cucumber. Do try this one at home!

If boiling water bath canning, wash 2 pint jars and have them simmering in your canning pot. Make sure you've got rings and the proper size lids. If you're making quick pickles, just wash the jars.

In a medium saucepan, bring vinegar, water, and pickling salt to a boil.

While you're waiting for the brine to boil, tightly pack each jar with kohlrabi spears. I find it easiest to lay the jar on its side to start.

Add dill and garlic to the jars, dividing equally between the 2 jars. Use a chopstick to tamp down dill in between kohlrabi spears if needed.

When the brine is boiling, pour it into the jars, filling to ½ inch below the top. You will have extra brine. Use it on my Asian-inspired kohlrabi pickles, or cukes, or peppers, or beets? If you're making quick pickles, transfer to the fridge when cool, and let cure for a week or, better, two before eating.

If you're processing these for shelf stability, wipe the rim of the jar with a damp towel. Apply a lid and ring, tightening the ring until it's just tight. Don't crank on it. Transfer to canning pot. When the water returns to a boil start timing and process for 10 minutes. Turn off heat and transfer jars to a towel-lined counter where they can rest undisturbed until cool. Listen for the ping! Once cool, remove the rings and lift the jars up by the lid. If you can, the jar is sealed. If the lid comes off, use a plastic cap and refrigerate the pickles as with quick pickles. Give them a week or two to cure, then enjoy.

So interesting! I've never tried pickled kohlrabi before but it seems so similar to cabbage that I can't imagine it would be bad in any sense of the word! Definitely want to try this recipe next time I pickle. Thanks for sharing!

Looking for something?

RECIPES BY CATEGORY (see the Visual Recipe Index for Recipes by Ingredient)

Printfriendly

Disclosure

You're welcome to snag a photo and link it back here to this recipe. Please do not copy and paste my recipes. Though I understand a list of ingredients cannot be copyrighted, my words and my photos are copyrighted, and scraping them is cause for me to file for copyright infringement. I'd appreciate the page view just like other bloggers, so please play nice. Sharing is indeed caring. Stealing is not.

Although I've never made a single dime from it I made $10 once!, Farm Fresh Feasts is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. This site uses affiliate links, and perhaps some day I may make a bit of income off if you click on the links. For now, bupkiss.

Farm Fresh Feasts ONLY posts products that are personal recommendations and is not being directly compensated by any of these companies. I am justsharing what I use, buy and like.